Evaluating the personality structure of semi-captive Asian elephants living in their natural habitat


Journal article


M. Seltmann, Samuli Helle, M. Adams, Khyne U Mar, Mirkka Lahdenperä
Royal Society Open Science, 2018

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Seltmann, M., Helle, S., Adams, M., Mar, K. U., & Lahdenperä, M. (2018). Evaluating the personality structure of semi-captive Asian elephants living in their natural habitat. Royal Society Open Science.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Seltmann, M., Samuli Helle, M. Adams, Khyne U Mar, and Mirkka Lahdenperä. “Evaluating the Personality Structure of Semi-Captive Asian Elephants Living in Their Natural Habitat.” Royal Society Open Science (2018).


MLA   Click to copy
Seltmann, M., et al. “Evaluating the Personality Structure of Semi-Captive Asian Elephants Living in Their Natural Habitat.” Royal Society Open Science, 2018.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{m2018a,
  title = {Evaluating the personality structure of semi-captive Asian elephants living in their natural habitat},
  year = {2018},
  journal = {Royal Society Open Science},
  author = {Seltmann, M. and Helle, Samuli and Adams, M. and Mar, Khyne U and Lahdenperä, Mirkka}
}

Abstract

Data on personality for long-lived, highly social wild mammals with high cognitive abilities are rare. We investigated the personality structure of Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) by using a large sample of semi-captive timber elephants in Myanmar. Data were collected during 2014–2017 using questionnaires, for which elephant riders (mahouts) rated 28 behavioural adjectives of elephants. Repeated questionnaires were obtained for each elephant from several raters whenever possible, resulting in 690 ratings of 150 female and 107 male elephants. We started by performing a confirmatory factor analysis to compare the fit of our data to a previously published captive elephant personality structure. Owing to a poor fit of this model to our data, we proceeded by performing explanatory factor analysis to determine the personality structure in our study population. This model suggested that personality in these elephants was manifested as three factors that we labelled as Attentiveness, Sociability and Aggressiveness. This structure did not differ between the sexes. These results provide the basis for future research on the link between personality and reproductive success in this endangered species and more generally, help to resolve the selective pressures on personalities in long-lived, highly social species.


Share

Tools
Translate to